Douglas County officials to study museum space as courthouse readies for more judges

Douglas County Board of Commissioners ยท January 12, 2026

Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts

Subscribe
AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Residents pressed county officials for square-footage and rent details after a question about whether the county museum could remain in the old courthouse as the building is repurposed for additional judges. Commissioners said staff will study co-location options and present recommendations in January.

A resident asked for exact square footage of museum and leased office space and warned she would "hate to see Douglas County's artifacts... move to Cobb County," opening a discussion about whether the county'owned courthouse can continue to host the museum while the courthouse is renovated for judges.

Commissioner (Speaker 3) said the courthouse is a historic property with limitations and acknowledged looming space pressure: "This courthouse... we're getting 2 more judges, and we're running out of space." He said the county will examine whether the museum and county office space can coexist and that a consultant team is expected to present options in January: "we're expecting these guys to come in, I think, in January, somewhere in January, to kinda present...".

Why it matters: courthouse renovations driven by additional judicial positions can force agencies and nonprofits to relocate. Commissioners said the rent for the museum's leased office space is small compared with the county budget, but that decisions should weigh relocation costs, historic-preservation limits and long-term space needs.

County next steps: staff and a county advisory committee will study the museum's footprint, the rent and possible co-location strategies and return with recommendations in January. No formal decision was taken at the forum.

Context and community input: Several residents urged preservation of the museum and suggested exploring ways to increase public engagement with exhibits rather than eliminate the institution. Commissioner (Speaker 3) thanked volunteers and advisory members for their work investigating options and said the board will seek a "sweet spot" that is fiscally responsible to taxpayers while protecting artifacts.

The county did not set a timeline for a final decision at the meeting.